D. The 1991 Evidentiary Hearing
On March 7, 1991, Judge Tyson
held an evidentiary hearing as ordered by the Florida Supreme
Court. Judge Tyson only permitted Mr. Smith to present Ms. Lowe's
testimony. Except for a proffer, the circuit court would not
allow Mr. Smith to put in any corroborative evidence that Eddie
Lee Mosley, the man Ms. Lowe's affidavit says she saw the night
of the offense, was the man who committed this crime, and that
Mr. Smith was not that man (P.C.-R. 27-47, 106-07). The proffered
evidence included: a list of suspected Mosley victims, newspaper
articles regarding Mosley, Dr. Frumkin's psychological evaluation
of Mosley, Dr. Cohen's psychological evaluation of Mosley, Leslie
Alker's HRS report on Mosley, Dr. Eichert's psychological report
on Mosley, Dr. Koprowski's psychological report on Mosley, Cynthia
Maxwell's deposition testimony regarding Mosley's sexual assault
of her, Lisa Weisman's affidavit testimony regarding Mosley's
sexual assault of her, an involuntary hospitalization order regarding
Mosley, a motion appointing a mental health expert for Mosley,
a Broward Sheriff's Office (B.S.O.) booking sheet regarding Mosley
dated 5/19/87, a B.S.O. booking sheet regarding Mosley dated
5/17/84, a B.S.O. booking sheet regarding Mosley dated 4/30/82,
a B.S.O. booking sheet regarding Mosley dated 4/12/80, a Ft.
Lauderdale police report regarding Mosley dated 12/25/83, and
Dr. Hathaway's testimony regarding Mr. Smith's eyesight.
Ms. Lowe's testified at the evidentiary
hearing. Ms. Lowe unhesitantly testified that she still recalled
very well the moment the man flagged her down on April 14, 1985
(PC-R. 50). Ms. Lowe became "convinced" that Mr. Smith
was not the individual she saw on the night of the murder long
before she gave her affidavit in 1989. Prior to trial, Ms. Lowe
had never seen Mr. Smith in person. She had only seen a photograph
of Mr. Smith in a photo lineup. When she saw Mr. Smith in the
courtroom, she became "convinced" that Mr. Smith was
the wrong man. At the evidentiary hearing, she testified:
Only thing I remember is when
I walked into the courtroom . . . I seen Mr. Frank [Smith] standing
up there. I had my -- they kept saying is that the man, but I
had my doubts that was the man because the man I seen that night
he was muscular, big and Mr. Frank [Smith] was not."
(PC-R. 65). Ms. Lowe testified
that despite her doubts she identified Mr. Smith at trial as
the man she saw (PC-R. 79). When asked why she didn't tell the
court and jury that she made a mistake, she testified:
A. No, I couldn't feel like that.
Because -- I couldn't. I was confused.
Q. Were you worried while you
were testifying about whether or not Mr. Smith was the right
person?
A. I was confused.
THE COURT: I didn't hear the
answer?
THE WITNESS: Confused.
BY MR. MCCLAIN:
Q. Can you tell me as best you
can what you are thinking? What was it that you were confused
about?
A. That they saying they got
the man. The man needs to be off the street. He's dangerous and
they kept saying "this is the man," you just have to
say "this is the man because he need to be off the street."
And I was thinking about the little girl's mama, that she's going
through this, that had happened with her daughter and everything.
I was just confused.
Q. Did you feel a lot of weight
on your shoulders?
A. Yes.
Q. When you were in the courtroom
and you looked at Frank Lee Smith, did you have nagging doubts
in the back of your head?
A. Yes.
* * *
BY MR. MCCLAIN:
Q. When you looked at Mr. Smith
in the courtroom, what were you thinking?
A. What they told me, "the
man was dangerous and he needs to be off the street."
Q. What were you thinking about
his fitting the description?
A. He didn't fit that description
that I sketched out.
Q. When you got off the witness
stand, what did you think?
A. Terrible.
(PC-R. 79-80). Ms. Lowe's doubt
about her identification of Mr. Smith was present long before
1989. At trial, she knew that Mr. Smith was not the man she saw
-- that he didn't fit the description she sketched out. (Id).
She testified that when Mr. Walsh,
an investigator with undersigned counsel's office, approached
her on December 20, 1989 and showed her a photograph of Mr. Mosley
she knew that:
This is the one that flagged
me down in the car... [I]t brought moments back of the incident
when it happened. ... A warm feeling came over me.
(PC-R. 52). When asked if she
was certain Mr. Mosley was the man she saw, Ms. Lowe testified
that she was "very, very, very, certain" (PC-R. 52;
see also PC-R. 74-75 and 84).
Ms. Lowe testified that once
the police arrested Mr. Smith, she was under "a lot of pressure"
to identify him as the man she saw that night (PC-R. 63-64, 71).
When questioned about her identification of Mr. Smith from the
photo lineup, she testified:
They asked me is one of these
the guy. I said no, but I said that his hair was like the guy
I seen that night.
(PC-R. 71). Ms. Lowe admitted
picking out Mr. Smith from the photo lineup but was emphatic
that she told the detectives "that the hair was like the
guy that [she] saw" (PC-R. 60).
Ms. Lowe explained that Detectives
Scheff and Amabile pressured her to make an identification of
Mr. Smith at the photo lineup (PC-R. 63). She testified that
she was under:
"A lot of pressure ... from
the police officer that came out there telling me that the man
is dangerous and if he stays out there, he's going to do it to
someone else. So I was up on a lot of pressure."
(PC-R. 62-63).
She explained further:
I only told them that the hair
look like the man that did it. And when I say the hair that looks
like the man that did it, they kept pushing me "Is this
the man, Is this the man, Is this the man." ... They kept
saying that.
(PC-R. 81).
Ms. Lowe also testified that
she felt pressured by the prosecutor (PC-R. 63). She specifically
recalled being pressured to say that the man she saw that night
had a scar under his eye (PC-R. 53). Of course, Mr. Smith has
a significant noticeable scar under his right eye (R. 706). Ms.
Lowe said she was pressured to testify at trial about the scar
but refused to do so (PC-R. 53). In fact, the circuit court judge
at the evidentiary hearing, noticing the scar under Mr. Smith's
eye, asked Ms. Lowe about this:
The Court: Ma'am, did you say
the person that you saw did or did not have a scar?
The Witness: The man that learned
in my car? No scar.
The Court: Did not have a scar?
The Witness: No scar.
(PC-R. 87-88).
Ms. Lowe testified that she felt
pressure from not only the state but also from her neighborhood,
people she knew, and friends (PC-R. 78). Moreover, Ms. Lowe was
constantly thinking about the victim:
I know that little girl got killed.
I know she had got killed and that's all that was going through
my mind, the little girl got killed.
(PC-R. 86). As a result of all
this pressure, Ms. Lowe was, in her words, "confused"
when she finally saw Mr. Smith in person and realized he was
not the man she saw that night (PC-R. 79). At the time of Mr.
Smith's trial, Ms. Lowe was only 19-20 years old (PC-R. 77).
Ms. Lowe's hearing testimony
left no doubt that at Mr. Smith's trial she realized that Mr.
Smith was the wrong man. On December 20, 1989, this was only
confirmed when she saw Mr. Mosley's photo and became convinced
that Mosley was the individual she had seen at her home near
the time of the homicide. The State questioned her about having
been convicted of a theft charge subsequent to Mr. Smith's trial.
Ms. Lowe openly admitted that she had been convicted of a theft
charge (PC-R. 73).
In light of Ms. Lowe's recantation,
the State attempted to establish that Ms. Lowe was merely confused
and that she had, at the time of the pretrial investigation,
been shown a photo lineup containing Mr. Mosley's photo which
she failed to recognize. When asked if she had been shown a photograph
of Mr. Mosley pre-trial she emphatically stated she would recognize
Mosley if she saw him (R. 69), that "they didn't show me
no picture of him," (PC-R. 70) and that "the only thing
that was close to the guy that I seen that night" was the
composite sketch they drew (PC-R. 70). Moreover, Ms. Lowe's testimony
at the evidentiary hearing was consistent with her trial testimony
that she had only been shown two photo lineups -- the one containing
Mr. Smith's photograph and another containing a photograph of
a previous suspect, a Mr. Freeman. When questioned about being
shown photographs other than the photo lineup containing Mr.
Smith's photograph, Ms. Lowe testified:
I do know that they did show
me some more photographs because it was a guy in the photographs
they kept questioning me about. I don't know him personally,
but I knew him.
(PC-R. 69). Ms. Lowe testified
at trial about this same photo lineup containing a photograph
of Mr. Freeman, a man from the neighborhood that she recognized
(R. 684). Although she recognized Mr. Freeman, she said that
he was not the man she saw on the night in question (R. 684).
At trial, as at the evidentiary hearing, Ms. Lowe testified about
only those two photo lineups -- there was no third photo lineup.
In an attempt to establish that
there was a third photo lineup containing Mr. Mosley's photograph,
the State called the victim's mother, Mrs. McGriff. Mrs. McGriff's
testimony concerning this "mysterious" photo lineup
was confusing at best:
Q. At anytime did the police
come to you in those days after your daughter was killed and
show you photographs?
A. Yes.
Q. Do you remember how many times
or how many photographs they may have showed you?
A. Oh, about two or three.
Q. Did they show you a large
group of photographs or was it one at a time?
A. Yes, they showed me one at
a time and then they showed me large size.
Q. Okay. And on any of those
occasions, did the police officers show you a picture of Eddy
Lee Mosley?
A. Yes.
Q. Was it in a group or single
photo, do you remember?
A. It was in a group.
(PC-R. 113). On cross-examination,
counsel attempted to clarify Mrs. McGriff's answer:
Q. Now, you indicated that they
showed you two or three photos, or was that two or three they
showed you?
A. They showed me about two or
three photo -- Well, they asked me to look through the pictures.
Q. They gave you a couple of
photos, gave them to you and asked you to look through them?
A. Uh-huh.
Q. And that was all the photos
that the police ever showed you or did they show you more later,
or do you remember?
A. No, I don't remember.
Q. Okay. Did they also show you
-- I mean, if you don't remember just say you don't remember.
I'm just trying to be sure. I understand what you're saying.
Do you remember, did they actually
show you a line up at one point in time with about six pictures
in it?
A. No, there wasn't no six pictures.
It was like a photo book, do you know how you get a photo book?
Q. Yes.
A. I looked through the photo
book and skimmed through to look in the photo book.
Q. So they showed you a photo
book?
A. Yes.
Q. And it was a photo book with
more than six pictures in it?
A. Yes.
Q. And when did they show you
the photo book?
A. Oh, gee. I just don't remember,
but I think right after - right after my baby's death, I think,
I'm not for sure, right after. I'm not sure.
Q. You mean like the next day?
A. Yeah.
Q. And did they show you photo
of Frank Lee Smith that day?
A. Did they show me?
Q. Yes.
A. No, I picked him out myself.
Q. In that book?
A. Yes.
Q. And that was the next day
after your daughter's death?
A. Yes.
Q. Was Eddy Lee Mosley in that
photo book?
A. Yes.
Q. Did the police specifically
say "how about this guy?"
A. No.
Q. But you saw his photo in there?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you tell the police that
that was not the person?
A. Yes.
Q. You just -- Did you -- As
you went through the photo book, did you say "this isn't
the person, this isn't the person?"
A. Yes.
Q. And then when you got to Frank
Lee Smith you said "this is the person?"
A. Yes.
(PC-R. 118-121). Prior to the
evidentiary hearing, neither she nor Detectives Scheff or Amabile
ever mentioned Mrs. McGriff viewing photographs out of a photo
book.
Moreover, their testimony has
always been that Mrs. McGriff identified Mr. Smith from a photo
lineup and not while perusing a photo book (R. 642, McGriff;
R. 985, Scheff; R. 908 Amabile). At the evidentiary hearing,
both Detectives Scheff and Amabile stated that Mrs. McGriff was
shown a photograph of Mr. Mosley in a photo lineup and not a
photo book (PC-R. 148, Scheff and 185-6, Amabile). Detective
Amabile who sat through Mrs. McGriff's testimony at the evidentiary
hearing admitted that her memory as to what transpired and when
it transpired was different from his memory (PC-R. 198).
Although Mrs. McGriff, Detective
Scheff, and Detective Amabile have different stories concerning
how and when Mr. Mosley's photograph was shown to Mrs. McGriff,
they all testified that she identified his photograph as Mr.
Mosley and stated he was her cousin and not the man she saw that
night. In fact, Detective Amabile testified that he remembered
this specific photo lineup because Mrs. McGriff had stated that
Mr. Mosley was her cousin. The problem with this testimony is
that as with the testimony about the existence of a third photo
lineup containing Mr. Mosley's photograph, their prior sworn
testimony is in direct contradiction. At no time pre-trial or
at trial did anyone identify Mr. Mosley as a relative of Mrs.
McGriff -- and they were all asked whether any of her relatives
were suspected of the murder. In answer to the direct question,
the only relative the detectives ever identified pre-trial or
at trial was Edwin McGriff, another cousin of Mrs. McGriff.
Detective Scheff, the lead investigator
in this case, gave a very lengthy and detailed deposition covering
in chronological order everything he did in this case. He never
mentioned that Mr. Mosley was a serious suspect that they actively
investigated. He did not mention that there was a third photo
lineup containing Mr. Mosley's photograph. He specifically did
not identify Mr. Mosley as a relative of Mrs. McGriff. After
explaining that Mr. Freeman was eliminated as a suspect by Ms.
Lowe, Mr. Davis, and Mrs. McGriff, the following colloquy occurred:
Q. Did you have, at this point
in time, anybody in mind?
A. You mean, as a suspect?
Q. Yes.
A. Oh, no.
Q. How about any relative of
the deceased, uncles, cousins?
A. We had booked an individual
by the name of Edwin McGriff, who is a cousin to Dorothy. As
I had indicated earlier, we checked with - on the first night,
for similar crimes. And, at that point in time, we discovered
that Edwin McGriff had been accused, I think, in 1982, of a sexual
battery of a minor black female chid, and subsequently, we sat
Dorothy McGriff down and explored the possibility with her that
it might have been her cousin. She was quite emphatic that the
person that she had seen was not her cousin and that she was
being truthful. It was my feeling that she was.
(Scheff deposition p. 44). Again
at Mr. Smith's trial, Detective Scheff was asked about relatives
and again he indicated that a cousin, Edwin McGriff, was the
only family member who was a suspect (R. 1022-23). Detective
Scheff testified that this cousin, Edwin McGriff, was never displayed
in a photo lineup (R. 1024). Detective Scheff did admit at trial
that Mr. Mosley was a suspect, but never said he was eliminated
by all three witnesses through a photo lineup or that he was
a cousin of Mrs. McGriff. In fact, Detective Scheff testified
that he did not show a photo lineup containing Mr. Mosley's picture
to any of the witnesses:
Q Was Eddie Lee Mosley ever a
suspect in this case?
A Eddie Lee Mosley was a suspect
in this case along with Edwin McGriff. Initially when we first
began investigating the case, really had no specific direction
to go in.
Q How about Jessie Smith?
A Jessie Smith is Eddie Lee Mosley
under an alias name.
Q Lee Greely, G-r-e-e-l-y Smith?
A I don't know.
Q That's all I have.
A Spell it again?
Q G-r-e-e-l-y. Doesn't ring a
bell?
A No.
Q The man called Gator Mouth
ever a suspect in this case?
A Yes.
Q The man that went by the name
of Gator Mouth?
A Right.
Q Was a guy by the name of Big
John ever a suspect in this case?
A Yes. I wouldn't say they were
suspects in the case. I would say they were people who were brought
to our attention for one reason or another.
Q How about Edward Simmons, did
you ever check with John Boucada of your department? He supposedly
looks like Mr. Smith.
MR. DIMITROULEAS: I will object
to counsel testifying and I'm objecting to the form of the question.
THE COURT: Objection sustained,
may be rephrased.
Q (By Mr. Washor) Did you ever
investigate Edward Smith?
A Edward Simmons?
Q Simmons.
A No, sir.
Q Never had any contact with
Detective Boucada regarding him?
A No, sir.
Q Were any of these people
ever shown to any of the witnesses in either a photo or live
lineup, people whose names I just read off other than Freeman?
A Other than Freeman, no.
(R. 1024 - 1026).
At his pre-trial deposition,
defense counsel specifically asked Detective Amabile if any of
Mrs. McGriff's cousins were ever suspected of the murder. Detective
Amabile responded that Edwin McGriff was the only cousin ever
considered a suspect (Amabile Deposition at p. 44). Detective
Amabile was asked this again at Mr. Smith's trial and again responded
that no family members, other than Edwin McGriff, were suspects
(R. 946). The same Detective Amabile testified in 1991 that he
didn't remember much about the photo lineups except for the instance
when Mrs. McGriff identified Mr. Mosley as her cousin:
Q. Do you recall what photo lineups
were shown the witnesses? And let me clarify when I use the word
"witnesses," I am referring to Dorothy McGriff, Chiquita
Lowe and Gerald Davis?
A. Unfortunately I would have
to answer yes because of hearing the prior [evidentiary hearing]
testimony [of Mr. McGriff and Detective Scheff]. What I recall,
I recalled it more than one photo lineup being shown. I know
from testimony today it was also mostly the reason I stated to
Mr. Zacks, that I recall Eddy Lee Mosley is - that's how I found
out that he was related to Dorothy McGriff.
(PC-R. 185-86). Of course, this
testimony is in direct contradiction with his pre-trial and trial
testimony that the only relative of Mrs. McGriff who was a suspect
in the case was Edwin McGriff, a cousin. Moreover, Detective
Amabile, like Detective Scheff, testified at trial that none
of the suspects, with the exception of Freeman, were displayed
in a photo lineup:
Q There were a slew of other
suspects in this case, weren't there, besides Mr. Freeman?
A A slew or --
Q More than one?
A Yes.
Q Was there a Carspelia (phonetic)
Williams who was a suspect?
A His name was given to us.
Q Eddie Lee Mosley?
A Yes.
Q Jessie Smith?
A I don't recall that name.
Q Greeley (phonetic) Smith?
A Again, I don't recall that
name.
Q Edward Calvin McGriff?
A Yes.
Q Was he related to the family
at all?
A I believe so, yes.
Q A person by the name of Gator
Mouth?
A Yes.
Q A person by the name of Big
John who Detective Frost said in his report somebody identified
a composite?
A Yes.
Q Were any of these leads followed
up on?
A Yes.
Q Were they all followed up on?
A Yes, to the best of my knowledge
with the exception of the two names I don't recall hearing.
Q What became of Big John?
A That I believe Detective Scheff
and myself checked out and he did not fit the physical description
at all.
Q Is that reflected in anywhere
in your notes or reports or anything of that nature?
A No, that would be Detective
Scheff's.
Q He should have it somewhere?
A He should.
Q Were any of these other
people other than Mr. Freeman in the photographic display or
in the live lineup shown to any other witnesses?
A No.
Q Did you investigate any
of the family members backgrounds to see whether they were ever
involved in this kind of thing before?
A I believe Edward McGriff.
Q Anybody else?
A No.
(R. 945-6).
In 1991 when Detective Scheff
was asked if he had any written documentation in the homicide
file reflecting the Mosley lineup he testified:
A. I don't think so. I might.
I would have to look through the file.
Q. With the file that you brought,
is there any indication in there of showing a photo of Eddy Lee
Mosley to any of the witnesses?
A. The file is -- I just brought
this so I could have some hope of remembering this stuff.
Q. In what you brought that you
thought would help you, and with your memory, is there anything
to indicate you showed a photo lineup containing Eddy Mosley?
A. No.
THE COURT: Showed who?
THE WITNESS: Eddy Lee Mosley.
MR. MCCLAIN: A photo lineup containing
Eddy Lee Mosley.
THE COURT: To whom?
BY MR. MCCLAIN:
Q. To --
A. Anybody.
Q. Anybody. To these
three witnesses that we've been talking about?
A. No.
(PC-R. 159-60)(emphasis added).
Moreover, Detective Scheff had no explanation for this glaring
contradiction between his pre-trial and trial testimony and his
testimony at the evidentiary hearing:
Q. I'm going to hand you pages
from your trial testimony. I have three pages to show you and
starting with was Eddy Lee Mosely (sic) a suspect. If you can
just read from there on until the middle of the third page [R.
1024-26].
A. I am sorry read to where?
Q. Let me show you.
A. Wait a minute, which is the
first page?
Q. Eddy Mosely's on the first
page.
A. Was Eddy Lee Mosely ever a
suspect - Do you want me to read it out loud?
Q. You can read it to yourself.
A. Okay.
Q. In those three pages, does
that help refresh your recollection as to your trial testimony?
A. Yes.
Q. You were asked out a series
of suspects by the prosecutor --
A. Yes.
Q. -- if Eddy Lee Mosely was
one of those suspects?
A. Yes.
Q. In fact, he read you a list
of names and asked you for a response?
A. That's correct.
Q. At the end he asked you were
any of those names he read to you were shown to the witnesses?
A. Yes.
Q. And you said other than Freeman
--
A. Yes, I'm assuming that's accurate.
I have no reason to not doubt it's accurate.
Q. Is that consistent with your
testimony here today?
A. No it's not.
MR. MCCLAIN: I have nothing further,
Your Honor.
THE COURT: Re-direct? Could you
repeat that question and answer again that you just asked?
MR. MCCLAIN: Was that consistent
with your testimony here today?
THE COURT: No, the last question?
MR. MCCLAIN: The question was,
were any of these people ever shown to any of the witnesses in
either a photo or live line-up (sic), people whose names I just
read off other than Freeman. Answer, other than Freeman, no.
THE COURT: Go ahead.
MR. ZACKS: Nothing further, Judge.
(PC-R. 179-181).
At the conclusion of the hearing,
it was decided that the State and Mr. Smith would simultaneously
do post-hearing memoranda (PC-R. 205). Post-hearing memoranda
were done (PC-R. 231-64).
On April 29, 1991, Assistant
State Attorney, Paul Zacks, left a message for Mr. McClain, Mr.
Smith's counsel to call Mr. Zacks. Subsequently, Mr. McClain
returned the call. At that time, Mr. Zacks said that Judge Tyson
had telephoned Mr. Zacks and discussed Mr. Smith's case. As a
result of that discussion, Mr. Zacks was assigned to draft an
order denying Mr. Smith relief. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Smith's
counsel received via facsimile a draft order and an accompanying
cover letter detailing the timetable Judge Tyson and Mr. Zacks
had worked out.
After learning of the ex parte
communication between Judge Tyson and the State, counsel for
Mr. Smith filed a Motion to Disqualify Judge, requesting that
Judge Tyson recuse himself from Mr. Smith's case because of the
ex parte communication (PC-R. 265-66). Counsel for Mr. Smith
also filed Objections to Draft Order, arguing:
On May 7, 1991, defense counsel
received the State's draft of a proposed order denying 3.850
relief in the above entitled matter. The proposed order and its
cover letter accompany this pleading. Defense counsel's understanding
is that the Order was drafted by the State after Judge Tyson
called Assistant State Attorney Paul Zacks and discussed the
matter. Neither Mr. Smith nor undersigned counsel were privy
to that discussion. Undersigned counsel had requested that any
post-hearing discussions about the case not be ex parte and that
such discussions be conducted with all parties present. Counsel
further suggested that the discussions could be telephonic but
that a court reporter should be on the line in order to put the
discussions on the record.
(PC-R. 279). Judge Tyson did
not rule on the Objections to Draft Order. On June 6, 1991, Judge
Tyson denied the Motion to Disqualify (PC-R. 283), and, the next
day, June 7, 1991, signed verbatim the State's order (PC-R. 284-87).
Mr. Smith thereupon filed a notice of appeal.
On May 28, 1992, the Florida
Supreme Court issued its opinion in Rose
v. State, 601 So.2d 1181 (Fla. 1992), wherein the court reversed
an order denying post-conviction relief because the Assistant
State Attorney, Paul Zacks, had engaged in ex parte contact with
the presiding judge in preparing a draft order denying all relief.
When Mr. Smith filed his brief in the Florida Supreme Court,
he relied upon the opinion in Rose
v. State. The State refused to concede error, but instead
filed a Motion to Get the Facts, in which it asked for a remand
so that evidence could be heard regarding the ex parte contact.
The Florida Supreme Court granted the motion and remanded.
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